The Kinnier Wilson Library in Edinburgh

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The Kinnier Wilson Library in Edinburgh 933 J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry: first published as 10.1136/jnnp.2003.029462 on 14 May 2004. Downloaded from HISTORICAL NOTE .......................................................................................... The Kinnier Wilson library in Edinburgh innier Wilson (1878–1937), like Ferrier before him, had J Hughlings Jackson (1835–1911) joined the staff of the come from Edinburgh to London to work at both King’s National Hospital, Queen Square, in 1862, two years after its College Hospital and at the National Hospital, Queen foundation, initially under the tutelage of the mercurial C E K 1 Square. Wilson’s library of some 1500 books and many more Brown Sequard (1817–1894). At Queen Square he later reprints was stored around Oxford after the death of his overlapped with Sir William Gowers (1845–1915) until he medical son, A Bruce Kinnier Wilson (1917–1978), latterly in retired in 1906.4 Many of his scores of papers in obscure the Cairns library at the Radcliffe Infirmary. In 1996, thanks journals were collated after his death by James Taylor.45He largely to the late John Potter, it was given to the Royal never wrote a book, despite urging by Osler and others; College of Physicians of Edinburgh, which had had a great indeed, he was in the habit of ripping up books, which he medico-historical library for over 300 years (see fig 1). read voraciously and indiscriminately.4 But many of his Kinnier Wilson’s life and his great contributions to papers are classics. Kinnier Wilson was the recipient of 35 neurology have been described elsewhere.2 Briefly, he Jackson reprints, some quite old, many with autographed qualified in Edinburgh in 1902, and after two years in Paris dedication to Wilson, which must have been given (fig 2) to with Pierre Marie and J Babinski, and in Leipzig with P Wilson at Queen Square between 1904 and 1906. He had all Flechsig, he moved first to Charing Cross Hospital and then the Jackson papers bound in two volumes, together with the to King’s College Hospital, London, where he overlapped second and third Jackson memorial lectures by Hitzig and with Ferrier, and to Queen Square where he benefited from Broadbent. The one book in the Wilson Library from the wisdom of J Hughlings Jackson in his last years. His 1912 Jackson’s own collection (if there ever was one) is Paul Edinburgh MD thesis on hepato-lenticular degeneration Richer’s Hyste´ro-epilepsie, 1881, from the Salpeˆtrie`re in Paris, remains the nosographic template of what is known as with an inscription to Jackson. Wilson’s disease, the treatable metabolic cause of which was Jackson’s seminal clinical work on cortical functions67was found after his death. complemented by the experimental studies of Sir David Wilson died aged 59 in 1937 as he was completing his great Ferrier (1843–1928)8–10 initially at Sir James Crichton Neurology text, published posthumously in 1940.3 Browne’s (1840–1938) West Riding Lunatic Asylum at Wilson apart, the two neurological giants concerned in Wakefield, and published in the Asylum Reports, a journal the Kinnier Wilson library are Jackson and Ferrier; who also used by Jackson, until he, Ferrier, Crichton Browne, and interacted more than either did with Wilson. Both were J C Bucknill founded the journal Brain in 1878. Ferrier also quirky as well as great. served as a physician at Queen Square from 1880 to 1907 but was rated only a moderate clinician by Sir Gordon Holmes,7 copyright. although a great experimentalist. The abrasive Hitzig1 denied even that in his 1903 Jackson memorial lecture—but not so Sir Charles Sherrington.89 http://jnnp.bmj.com/ on September 24, 2021 by guest. Protected Figure 1 Facade of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh circa Figure 2 Hughlings Jackson’s inscription to SA Kinnier Wilson on 1951 by John Piper C.H. (1903–1992) E The Piper Estate. reprint from West Riding Lunatic Asylum Reports for 1873. www.jnnp.com 934 J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry: first published as 10.1136/jnnp.2003.029462 on 14 May 2004. Downloaded from Ferrier’s ‘‘monographs’’ in the library above the initials ‘‘SAKW’’; R Holland’s Chapters of mental Besides seven books inscribed to Ferrier by the authors, physiology of 1852, noted as having been bought (? by Ferrier) the main identifiable Ferrier component of the Wilson at a Sotheby sale in 1873. There is an inscribed item from library are 24 bound volumes of monographs of around 700 F Batten’s collection by W Erb (1840–1921) on progressive pages each, each with between four and 20 items, mostly muscular dystrophy. There are seven books identifiable as French and German in the early volumes. The range of his having belonged to Ferrier, and seven to Sir William interests is very wide indeed; there is no thematic or Gowers, in particular an 1896 book inscribed as a gift to chronological order. The first of the four items in volume I Gowers, Borderline studies by G M Gould of Philadelphia, of the monographs is inscribed by himself ‘‘David Ferrier anticipating the title of Gowers’ famous Borderlands of epilepsy Edinburgh 1865’’, the year he started the study of medicine: of 1907. Seele und leib (soul and body), a posthumous German Most of the 1500 books of course always belonged to translation from the Dutch anatomist, alienist, and vitalist Wilson, written by his distinguished contemporaries: Adrian, JLC Schroeder van der Kolk (1797–1862). Seele is there best Babinski, Bastian, Batten, Byrom Bramwell, Charcot (eight considered as soul, rather than mind or psyche, as van der books, one inscribed to Ferrier), Duchenne, von Economo, Kolk argues for its existence from the rallying of the dying Foix, Guillain, seven by Gowers, Head, Pierre Marie, Weir mind, on occasion, in anticipation of dissolution. The second Mitchell, Oppenheim, Osler, Romberg, and Tinel. in this volume is a philosophical treatise La logique de Psychiatric texts abound, with a penchant for the topic of l’hypothe`se, the third Du froid en the´rapeutique, and the last L hysteria, with many early ones from the Salpeˆtrie`re in Traube’s 1867 lectures on cardio-respiratory diseases. Volume Charcot’s time to Babinski in 1917. There are several on shell II still contains a skull shape study by Rieger (1882) based shock during and after world war one. Seven books are by on phrenology, but subsequent volumes become more Freud, and many about him and about psychoanalysis, but neurological and psychiatric. There are many early French only one by Jung. Many titles by Cushing, Dandy, Foerster, titles on hysteria, and on crime and insanity, in German, one Olivecrona, and Penfield document evolving neurosurgery, of 400 pages, also an American one on the mind of the and books by Sicard and Moniz the advent of myelography assassin of President McKinlay. and angiography, respectively. In neuropathology there are Flechsig and others feature at length on the brain–mind long tomes by Sir Frederick Mott and shorter titles by van relationship, and Ferrier’s own Croonian lectures on cerebral Bogaert, Obersteiner, Spielmeyer, and others. localisation are included in French. This is also the topic of The profusion of books later than 1920 stems from 316 pages on coordination by O Foerster 10 years before he Wilson’s editorship of his own journal, the Journal of shifted from neurology to neurosurgery. Neuroanatomical Neurology and Psychopathology, which took the place of the papers are by the young Sherrington (1892) on the lumbo- Journal of Neurology and Psychiatry, started in Edinburgh in sacral plexus, and by Ramo´n y Cajal on the medulla (1896), 1902 by Wilson’s father-in-law, Alexander Bruce. After the optic chiasm (1899), the motor (1900), and on the Wilson’s death the name was changed again to the current copyright. auditory cortex (1902). Disease descriptions are Charcot and Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry. others in early contributions on motor neurone disease; an Lastly, the library contains his own writings: the excellent illustrated 310 page monograph on acromegaly is dedicated short Aphasia of 1926, but not his interesting Modern problems to Ferrier; there are many long treatises on neurosyphilis. in neurology of 1928. But there are the two posthumous Freud’s psychology features in the later volumes but there is editions of his Neurology,3 published by his brother-in-law also his early neurological monograph of 1893 on cerebral Ninian Bruce in two volumes in 1940, and re-edited in three diplegia. Ferrier was one of the organisers of the second in 1954, with an important section on aphasia by Russell international congress of experimental psychology in London Brain. It remains a splendid source book for the early history in 1892, and included many reports. of neurology. The beginning of neurosurgery is exemplified by two long The Edinburgh Royal College of Physicians also holds illustrated French texts: Lucas-Champonnie`re as early as Ninian Bruce’s own collection of about 500 titles, mostly http://jnnp.bmj.com/ 1878, and Chapault and Lande (1897), the latter with the neurological, but much less distinguished than the Kinnier new x ray pictures. There are quite a few oddities among Wilson library, which allows insight into some of the Ferrier’s monographs: almost 500 pages on Lustseuche interrelations of the great in neurology in a great era, and (sexual plagues) in antiquity by J Rosenbaum in a fifth into the apostolic succession in British neurology from edition of 1892—but mostly left uncut; a Paris 1887 text Hughlings Jackson to Ferrier and Sherrington on the Les courants de la polarite´dans l’aimant (magnet) et dans le corps humain by Chazerain where magnetic and galvanic strok- scientific side, and on the clinical side to Gowers and ing serves as a panacea; and a less bizarre handbook on Kinnier Wilson.
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